Observations in TNG:
"The Best of Both Worlds, Part II"

Here are some observations about sets, props and visual
effects in TNG: "The Best of Both Worlds, Part II" without a specific theme, and
a comparison of the original TV release (TNG) with the remastered episode
(TNG-R).

A close-up of the deflector beam of the 4-foot model before it fires an energy beam. Screenshots from other episodes show what the 6-foot model deflector dish looks like. The Saucer Rim on the Galaxy Class

"Encounter
at Farpoint"

In the remastered shot, especially the illumination of the
saucer underside by the deflector beam was improved.

"The Enemy"

In this shot, Admiral Hansen is seen holding a transparent PADD. Transparent PADDs of a different kind were also seen in the season 1 episode
"Symbiosis".

A closer look at the PADD in HD.

The Borg scanner is another re-use of the oscillation overthruster prop replica from "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension", previously seen as a scanner in "Déjà Q" and
as a geological tool in "Pen Pals".

"Déjà Q"

"Pen Pals"

A closer look at the device in HD.

Shelby previously used this engineering tool to scan the soil on Jouret IV in
"The Best of Both Worlds I".

"The Best of
Both Worlds I"

An HD close-up of the device.

The bridge of Hansen's (unnamed) flagship is a redress of the USS Enterprise-D battle bridge seen later in the episode. The red alert display behind him is similar to the ones seen in "Star Trek: The Motion Picture", "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" and "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier".

"Star Trek I"

"Star Trek V"

No changes

"Star Trek II"

The shot of the USS Enterprise-D slowly approaching the camera was filmed with the 4-foot model and appears for the first time in this episode. It replaces a similar shot of the 6-foot model filmed for "Encounter at Farpoint". Enterprise Flybys in TNG and TNG-R

"Hide and Q"

In TNG-R, we see a similar shot with the 4-foot
model, as the original footage could not be located. Actually, it is a shot of
the Enterprise flying into the opposite direction that was mirror-inverted.

Picard's empty ready room.

No changes

The aftermath of the Battle of Wolf 359. The wreckage
includes some pre-production models (which remained intact), such as study models of the Excelsior and from the never produced
film "Planet of the Titans". There are also a number
of models that were custom-built, including the damage. Two of the more
prominent wrecks, the three-nacelled USS Princeton (Niagara class, visible on
the right when the Enterprise enters the debris field) and the single-nacelled
USS Firebrand (Freedom class, visible on the left), are detailed large-scale
models made by Greg Jein. The scene also shows some smaller models built by Ed
Mirarecki.

The following models could be identified in the SD version
of the episode or were supposedly used for the graveyard:

The great sequence in HD. We can't identify more ships, but
the improved resolution confirms our findings.

Data should sit on the ops console, as it was the case
earlier and later in the same scene. But an obviously female stand-in has taken
his place in this shot.

Also, note a piece of carpet to the right of the seat.

The female officer can be seen better in HD. The piece of
carpet is still present too.

A look at the Borg cube. In contrast to shots of the ship seen earlier in the episode, this scene did not appear in
"The Best of Both Worlds I".

No changes

Behind the rotating Borg viewscreen, the matte painting of the Borg ship interior, created for
"Q Who" and last seen in the previous episode, can be seen in this shot.
Note how distorted the Enterprise appears on the Borg screen.

"The Best of
Both Worlds I"

Note that the recomposed shot in HD is a lot darker than the
original.

Riker in the captain's chair on the battle bridge. A CG model of the stardrive section is displayed on monitors behind him.

The shot of Riker in HD.

The battle bridge viewscreen has remained mainly the same since it was last seen in "The
Arsenal of Freedom". Only the two LCARS displays to the left and right of the viewscreen were changed a little and the upper LCARS display is now a red alert marker.

"The
Arsenal
of Freedom"

The viewscreen in HD.

"The Arsenal
of Freedom"

Shots of Riker on the battle bridge.

In TNG-R we can see an upconverted shot (#2 in this
sequence). The rest of the sequence consists of different takes of the scene
than in SD. We presume that the original takes could not be located for the
remastering, and that for all but one an alternate take was available.

In HD we can see a CG model, as already in TNG-R:
"Encounter at Farpoint". The telltale sign is, the RCS thruster by the deflector dish has cutouts like the
"Generations" model. Also all the lifeboat hatches have small lines at the top and bottom, which is not on the
6ft studio model.

This shot of the Borg cube also appeared in the first half of the
two-parter.

The "imperfection" of the model, which consists of
all kinds of parts that often form odd angles becomes very obvious in HD.

A good look at the stardrive section of the USS Enterprise-D and the ship's deflector shield.

The recomposed shot in the remastered episode.

A close-up of the stardrive section and the starboard warp nacelle.

The shots of the Enterprise in HD.

Another close-up of the USS Enterprise-D, this time of the saucer section.

The emergency transporter armbands in this episode look different from the ones seen
in the later episode "Timescape".

"Timescape"

An HD close-up of the device.

When Data and Worf's shuttle exits the shuttlebay, the wall of the
shuttlebay is a model that was built by Ed Miarecki. The last bit of the model, a triangular wall that was intended to suggest the sloped side of the big main shuttlebay door's exterior, was omitted in the original version of the shot.

The small triangular shape has been restored in the HD version. It's very
quick motion, but it ties into the shape of that part of the exterior model.

The tractor beam of the Borg ship is unable to lock on to the shuttle due to the antimatter spread fired by the saucer section of the USS Enterprise-D.

The recomposed shots in the remastered episode.

The interior of the Type-7 shuttle. The emergency transporter platform was installed for this episode.

We can recognize more details of the interior in HD.

A few nice shots of the Borg cube and the Type-7 shuttlecraft.

The recomposed shots in HD.

The stardrive and saucer section of the USS Enterprise-D facing the Borg cube.

The comparison shot shows what the battle bridge looked like when it was last seen in "The
Arsenal of Freedom". As can be seen, the ceiling of the set has been changed completely.

"The Arsenalof Freedom"

A look at the battle bridge in HD.

"The Arsenal
of Freedom"

The biobed seen in this shot was originally created as a cloning unit used on
Mariposa in "Up the Long Ladder". It also appeared as an emergency biosupport unit in "Transfigurations".

"Up the LongLadder"

"Transfigurations"

A look at the biobed in HD.

A good look at Locutus of Borg.

Locutus in HD.

This graphic, showing a multimodal reflection map analysis, was especially created for this episode. The graphic was reused in later episodes, like "Devil's
Due" where it can be seen on a console on Ventax II.

"Devil's Due"

The displays in HD.

As can be seen, the large sickbay LCARS display was not changed between seasons.

"The VengeanceFactor"

The Borg cube approaching Saturn.

The shot in HD.

This graphic, showing endocrine functions, was also present in the set in "Transfigurations".

"Transfigurations"

A close-up of the display in HD.

This wall console also previously appeared in "Transfigurations". The console originally was the back wall of the transporter room in "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier" and "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country".

"Star
Trek V"

"Transfigurations"

No changes

"Star
Trek VI"

The Mars Defense Perimeter sentry pods are swiftly destroyed by the Borg cube.
The model, composed of submarine kit parts, would later appear as the Soliton
Wave test ship in "New Ground".

The sequence in HD. We can recognize red Starfleet markings and
something like windows on the models.

More close-ups of the Borg ship.

The TNG-R version uses a bigger frame size, perhaps because
the close-up was deemed to blurry.

This aft shot of the 4-foot model of the USS Enterprise-D was newly created for this episode. The comparison screenshot from "Hollow
Pursuits" shows what the 6-foot model looks like from this perspective.

"Hollow Pursuits"

This is another sequence with a CG model of the ship.

A good look at different parts of the cybernetics lab. The central frame, in which Locutus is kept, was last seen in "The
Offspring", where it housed Lal. The set, however, is different. In "The Offspring", the cybernetics lab was a redress of the battle bridge. As the battle bridge set was needed in this episode, this cybernetics lab
was created in a spot on Stage 9 - across the hallway from the transporter room - that was used for many other sets.

It was first used as the banquet hall in
"Haven", and also served as Phillipa's office in "The
Measure of a Man", Troi's office, the
geology lab in "Pen Pals" and the barber shop, among others. The
cybernetics lab lately appeared as the medical lab in "Transfigurations".

"The Offspring"

The cybernetics lab in HD.

"Transfigurations"

A close look at the circuitry in Data's head.

The circuitry in HD.

Medical cases like this one were first seen in "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" and "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan". They have appeared in several earlier TNG episodes.

"Star
Trek II"

An HD close-up of the case. We can read the label
"Perishable cultures".

The text of the medical display behind O'Brien cannot be read in SD. It is exactly the same as in "Transfigurations", though.

"Transfigurations"

No changes

The Borg cube in orbit of Earth as seen on the main bridge viewscreen of the USS Enterprise-D.

The viewscreen in HD.

These shots of the USS Enterprise-D also appeared in the first half of this
two-parter.

The recomposed shots in HD. Note that the impact of the
cutting beam is brighter, and causes lens flares.

This shot of the USS Enterprise flying away was also seen in the first Borg episode, "Q Who", while the shot of the Borg cube was created for
"The Best of Both Worlds II".

"Q Who"

The Borg cube explodes.

The explosion was completely redone for TNG-R.

Earth and the Moon.

Earth and Moon in HD, and a look at the accordingly
flipped CG model of the Enterprise.

This shot of the USS Enterprise-D first appeared earlier in the episode. Here the footage was flipped.

Earlier
in
this episode

This patch hides the wounds caused by the Borg assimilation process.

The patches in HD.

Picard is seen through his observation room window from the outside in four episodes, in "Coming of
Age", "Conundrum", "Darmok" and this episode. In this episode, however, we get the best look at the exterior of the ship around this window.

The ship's exterior as seen in this shot was a simple cardboard model built by Rick Sternbach and Mike Okuda.

"Coming
of Age"

"Conundrum"

A look at the window in TNG-R.

"Darmok"

A final look at Earth and Moon. If one compares this shot to the earlier shot of Earth and the
Moon, it can be seen that the Moon has been rotated
180 degrees.

Earlier
in
this episode

In the remastered version, the Moon was not rotated but flipped
horizontally.

Credits

Thanks to Anthony Misztal for several additional observations and to Fabian
and TrekBBS users Syd_Vicious and Maxwell Everett for hints about alternate
takes. Thanks to Christian Hinze of Star
Trek HD, who spotted the woman taking Data's place on the bridge.